Almost Perfect

Binghamton Mets starter Jonah Tong was one out shy of a perfect game when the team’s manager, Reid Brignac, pulled him from the game.☹️

One away! 1️⃣‼️

❓Several more pitches would have made that big a difference?🤷‍♂️ (Tong threw 13 pitches to get the first 2️⃣ outs in the final inning.)

Quote within article authored by Tim Britton

Joe DeMayo wrote this about Tong in his article, “Probably the biggest thing that has helped him is his openness to learn and continuously be challenged,” Mets pitching and performance integration coordinator Kyle Rogers told SNY.”

Jonah Tong / George Napolitano/Brooklyn Cyclones

Tong is the Mets 6th-ranked prospect and the third pitcher — behind Brandon Sproat and Nolan McLean, per mlb.com.

Learn more about Tong in DeMayo’s article — “Jonah Tong discusses his journey from Canada to rising Mets pitching prospect.”

Mets Facts — June 21, 2024

Sixty years ago, on Father’s Day, June 21, 1964 in the first game of a twin bill, the Phillies’ Jim Bunning no-hit the Mets at Shea Stadium, striking out 10 while walking none in the only perfect game ever pitched against the Queens men. It was Bunning’s first season with the Phils after being traded to them by the Tigers in one of baseball’s most lopsided deals.

Unfortunately for the home team, despite getting three hits in the second game they were again no match for the league-leading Phils, whose three runs in the top of the first were one more than then the Mets scored in the whole game, the Phillies sending nine batters to the plate before the Mets could get their turn in the batter’s box.

The day’s two losses put the cellar-dwelling Mets 21.5 games behind the Phils in the National League standings and 11.5 behind the next-to-last Milwaukee Braves.

At that point in the season, the Mets were the only NL team whose pitchers had yielded more than 300 runs.

At season’s end, their top four starters all had losing records:

StarterWL
Jack Fisher1017
Tracy Stallard1020
Al Jackson1116
Galen Cisco619

Since 1962, only 15 Mets pitchers have lost 16 or more games in a season and, only in 1964, did four do that. Further, in 1962, three accomplished that feat; in 1963 and 1965, two did.7

The last Mets’ pitcher to lose >= 16 in a season was Mike Torrez, who lost 17 in 1983 while walking 113 batters on a team that won only 68 games.